Thank you, Mr. Chair, for having me here and for giving me an opportunity to speak.
Good evening to the honourable members as well, and thanks for the time provided for me.
I want to acknowledge that my presentation today has contributions from a very wide consultation with #EndSARS Canada, the Canadian Association of Nigerian Physicians and Dentists, the National Association of Seadogs, the Nigerian-Canadian Association of Newfoundland and Labrador and with associations in Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, the greater Toronto area, Hamilton, Vancouver and Calgary. My presentation is being offered after due consultation with all of these organizations.
My testimony today will focus mainly on helping to provide you a deeper insight into the root cause of the problems and the reasons that Nigerians, particularly the youth, have had enough and have started a protest that has gone all around the world.
The #EndSARS protest in Nigeria and around the world is in response to a government that has refused to pay attention to the needs of people. It's a government that has abandoned its key responsibilities to protect lives and property. The protests served to ignite and unmask many years of the negligence of the government to seriously address societal issues and reverse its undermining and weakening of the institutions of government.
SARS, the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, is one of the institutions of government that is a product of a severely broken system. After many years of oppression and loss of trust in the government, the people of Nigeria have taken to the streets to protest against police brutality as perpetrated by SARS. Sadly, on the 20th of October, 2020, unarmed peaceful protesters were flagrantly shot by the military at the Lekki tollgate in Lagos and also in other parts of Nigeria. This has helped in exacerbating the situation.
This situation is due to insecurity, lack of jobs, poverty and the lack of a national agenda to promote action-based and equitable national development. There is a police structure system of government that honours and celebrates mediocrity. Along with injustice, there is a lack of confidence that the judicial system will be fair, as well as poorly funded education and health care and corrupt practices.
To make it worse, Boko Haram Islamic fundamentalists have moved into the area of the fully armed Fulani herdsmen occupying the forests of the Middle Belt and the south of Nigeria, extorting people and raping and killing children, women and men. The Nigerian security forces have responded with their showmanship efforts.
I'll provide examples of why these statements have been made. These are particularly from people who are in high authority.
I'll quote Ali Ndume, who is the chair of the Senate Committee on Army, and who, in a committee briefing, expressed great regret and said he is still calling on the Nigerian government to bring to book those involved with Boko Haram terrorist activities. He expressed his disagreement with the government's continuing with the deradicalization of terrorists program and the “resettling”, “reintegrating” and “pampering” of Boko Haram terrorists. He specifically cited the beheading of the mallams. Mallams are senior Muslims and spiritual leaders, and 75 of them were taken to an abattoir and slaughtered by Boko Haram terrorists. These terrorists now have been brought in by the Nigerian government as repentant terrorists, even with the evidence of their continuing activities.
Recently, after the shooting at the Lekki tollgate, the Nigerian government, instead of responding to cries from youth, has gone into a public campaign.
As revealed by Nima Elbagir, who is a CNN senior international correspondent, live ammunition was used on peaceful protesters at the Lekki tollgate shooting on October 20 in Lagos, Nigeria.
Ayoola Kassim, who's also a reporter on the popular TV channel Channels Television News, reported that the Nigeria Police College recruit in training is fed with a budget of only one around 150 naira, which is the equivalent of 45 Canadian cents per day. One cannot be trained to serve and to protect with a 45-cent daily meal budget.
The system has been programmed to produce officers who will brutalize and abuse human rights. My witnessing today is not to cast doubt on the men and women who serve within SARS, but to witness that SARS is also an element of a failed structure. The women and the men who work within SARS, who brutalize Nigerians, are also victims of the system. A complete systemic overhaul that includes not only just SARS but all other arms of the government is seriously needed.
Agnes Callamard, who is a United Nations special rapporteur, after a 12-day investigative tour of Nigeria that was done in September 2019, concluded that “Nigeria is a pressure cooker of internal conflicts and generalised violence that must be addressed urgently” and “The overall situation that I encountered in Nigeria gives rise to extreme concern”.
Her report concluded that:
Nigeria is confronting nationwide, regional and global pressures, such as population explosion, an increased number of people living in absolute poverty, climate change and desertification, and increasing proliferation of weapons. These are re-enforcing localised systems and country-wide patterns of violence, many of which are seemingly spinning out of control....
All of these come together to say that there's a loss of trust and confidence in public institutions that has prompted Nigerians to take matters of protection into their own hands, which is leading to a proliferation of vigilante groups and self-protecting armed militia, and cases of jungle justice have become really very common in Nigeria.
Instead of the government responding through dialogue and listening to the pains of Nigerians to reverse the state of hopelessness, the government has sadly chosen a dictatorship-style iron hand to hunt down and to arrest leaders of the peaceful protesters and charge them with acts of terrorism against the country, in some cases the freezing of their bank accounts, while pampering the actual terrorists who are still running on a rampage against innocent Nigerians.
This is exactly why the people are protesting. This is why there is the call for urgent help from international communities, certainly from Canada, to put pressure on the Nigerian government.